Quotes by and posts relating to one of the most influential authors of the 20th century, G.K. Chesterton

A blog dedicated to providing quotes by and posts relating to one of the most influential (and quotable!) authors of the twentieth century, G.K. Chesterton (1874-1936). If you do not know much about GKC, I suggest visiting the webpage of the American Chesterton Society as well as this wonderful Chesterton Facebook Page by a fellow Chestertonian

Monday, June 30, 2014

Sir,—I
am very grateful to Mr. Godard for the courteous letter in which he
replies to my defence of the existence of patriotism as a virtue. The
whole of his case appears to hang upon one idea, that because I and other
reasonable people think that patriots are at present making fools of
themselves therefore we ought to abandon altogether a virtue which we
cannot permit to have full play. "To have to subdue or check an instinct
lest it should lead to vice scarcely harmonises with the theory that it
is a virtue." Now I should have thought that it harmonised
extraordinarily well, for I know no virtue in the world that does not
have to be subdued and checked. Why, half the vices that exist are only
unchecked virtues. If a man had such love for his children that he
forged bank notes to enrich them, he would be turning a virtue into a
vice. If he was so courteous about the feelings of others that he
perjured himself rather than distress the prisoner in the dock, he would
be turning a virtue into a vice. If he had such reverence for his
mother that he assisted her to commit murder, he would be turning a
virtue into a vice. And as a matter of fact every virtue is turned into a
vice by millions of silly people, just as patriotism is. Domestic love is made an excuse for swindling, purity
for scandal-mongering, public spirit for private advancement. I do not,
as Mr. Godard seems to think, choose solemnly between the ethical code
and the patriotic code, not having the smallest notion what the latter
thing may be. I simply rank my loyalty to my nation, along with that to
my kind and my family, in its
reasonable place in the ethical code itself. It is quite true that I
admire patriotism because I think it ethical. The same applies to
honesty.

I admit I cannot yet
understand why I should accept Mr. Chamberlain's opinion, or the
majority's opinion, about whether I am patriotic. No doubt they would say
I am not patriotic; probably they would say that Mr. Godard was not
ethical. Of course, the patriotism I think a virtue is my own patriotism,
not that of Mr. Chamberlain. So it is with all virtues. It is my own
honesty I think right, not the honesty of Highland cattle-lifters; it is
my own chastity I think right, not the chastity incumbent on the Grand
Turk. Every virtue has its varieties and its irregular history. As to
Mr. Chamberlain and his "patriots," I can only say that I detest them
primarily because I am a patriot and they are ruining my fatherland.

One word as to the
Boers. I repeat that I cannot imagine any decent man doing what the
Boers are doing, continuing a sanguinary struggle, unless he was
fighting for a virtue. "I sympathise with the Boers, not because they
are patriots," says Mr. Godard, "but because independence is a thing to
be prized, because liberty is a jewel to be guarded." Surely neither Mr.
Godard nor any Liberal can really mean that the Boers had some secret of
political perfection, that the government of President Kruger
was so full of recondite joys and beauties that a person would be wrong
to permit it to be altered at any cost. If, on the other hand, he means
by "liberty" the independence of the fatherland, then I entirely agree
with
him. But in that case he does sympathise with the Boers because they
are patriots. To sum up, I think Mr. Godard imagines that when I say
patriotism is a virtue I mean that patriotism is virtue. I refer it and
everything else to a test of universal good. Only I happen to find that
it passes the test with honours.— Yours, &c., G.K.C

It is true, as everyone is saying, that the official inquiry [concerning the income tax] is far more stringent and irritating than it was; but it is not quite fair to state that fact alone. If the system of inquisition is carried very far, it is also true that the system of exemptions is carried very far also. What is increased both by inquisition and exemption is the official's knowledge of the citizen's private affairs. The modern tax-gatherers ask for so much because of the private fact that a surgeon got a very big fee. But they are willing to give part of it back for the sake of another private fact- that he went to earn it in a motor-car. I do not discuss here whether the change is good or bad; I only say that an honest man who confesses all his windfalls and claims all his exemptions has provided the government with something like a small volume of autobiography.

In fact, it would be rather fun to treat it like that. A man who really resented the income-tax (which I do not) might amuse himself, not by giving short, evasive answers, as such malcontents do, but by giving true but interminably long answers. There is always a complication of purely personal reasons why this or that is convenient to a man in his trade. A pony-cart or a telephone might be made the subject-matter of pages of rich prose. In my own trade, in particular, there are real difficulties in deciding what is and is not necessary to a purely professional activity. Let all these difficulties be set out, pro and con, in a document of somewhat the weight and length of the manuscript of a three-volume novel. It is certain that, except for certain circumstances, there might be a worse article, or an unsaleable article, or no article. Let all those circumstances be set down with a literary and lavish hand. I like to think of the face of an Income-Tax Commissioner, as he opens an appeal against the assessment, and reads some item like this: "Five shillings for hansom-cab driving the necessary number of times round Barnes Common. This item may surprise the Commissioners, and, indeed, it is impossible that they should realise how indispensable it was for literary industry, unless they realise the atmosphere of the occasion. The sun had just set, or rather, had just vanished- for a low hedge of soft-hued but heavy clouds completed and, as it were, fortified the horizon; the air, though not without a certain still coolness, seemed to call aloud for some more exhilirant, etc. etc." It would go on for some pages, and prove triumphantly that the result had been a article sold for three guineas instead of two. If the official turned with some impatience to another item, it would be "Fare to Tunbridge Wells. It is here necessary to explain that I was in love at the time, and had a chance of marrying, if I could satisfy the Editor of the New Nonconformist with an article on 'Passion versus Platonic Love.' I was not deceived in my expectation that a renewed glimpse of Aglavaine would raise my literary powers to the highest purchasing point. By a contrast, which in any other woman might have seemed bizarre, her hair and eyes..." And so on, and so on.

I fancy those who are really in revolt against the Income-Tax Commissioners might cause them quite a lot of annoyance in that way. But I shall not join them, having other revolutions on hand.

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

It is obvious enough that whitewashing a man is quite the opposite of washing
him white. The curious thing is that people often try to whitewash a man,
and fail, when it might be possible to wash him, and to some limited extent,
succeed. The real story, if the culprit only had the courage to tell it,
would often be much more human and pardonable than the stiff suspicious fiction
that he tells instead. Many a public man, I fancy, has tried to conceal
the crime and only succeeded in concealing the excuse [. . .] If we had the key of their souls we might come
upon virtues quite unexpected — or at least upon vices more generous. In
many a complex human scandal, I fancy, the first real slander is the acquittal.

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

It is plainer still in more popular problems like Free Will. If
St. Thomas stands for one thing more than another, it is what may be
called subordinate sovereignties or autonomies. He was, if the flippancy
may be used, a strong Home Ruler. We might even say he was always
defending the independence of dependent things. He insisted that such a
thing could have its own rights in its own region. It was his attitude
to the Home Rule of the reason and even the senses; "Daughter am I in my
father's house; but mistress in my own." And in exactly this sense he
emphasised a certain dignity in Man, which was sometimes rather
swallowed up in the purely theistic generalisations about God. Nobody
would say he wanted to divide Man from God; but he did want to
distinguish Man from God. In this strong sense of human dignity and
liberty there is much that can be and is appreciated now as a noble
humanistic liberality. But let us not forget that its upshot was that
very Free Will, or moral responsibility of Man, which so many modern
liberals would deny. Upon this sublime and perilous liberty hang heaven
and hell, and all the mysterious drama of the soul. It is distinction
and not division; but a man can divide himself from God, which, in a
certain aspect, is the greatest distinction of all.

About Me

My name is Mike. I am a Catholic living in Mt. Sterling, Kentucky (though I am originally from Belleville, Illinois, a suburb of St. Louis on the Illinois side of the Mississippi). I am a convert to Catholicism from a fundamentalist Baptist background, and Jesus Christ is the most important person in my life.